Chattanooga Times Free Press

SUPREME COURT MUST PROTECT ABORTION MEDS

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Once again, the U.S. Supreme Court finds itself at the center of a national case involving access to abortion, this time around the drug mifepristo­ne, which along with misoprosto­l forms part of the regimen for a so-called medication abortion. Its ruling is expected in June, and that ruling should be clear, if only to help clean up the mess it created with its overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade a year and a half ago.

For a body that had insisted its Dobbs ruling would finally and definitive­ly send the question of abortion to the states, it has often found itself dragged back to the debate. This should come as no surprise; it was obvious even before Dobbs was leaked that the radical groups and officials hellbent on taking away this medical choice from women would not be satisfied with doing so only within the confines of certain states.

Since Roe was first issued 50 years ago, the anti-choice movement have been very clear that they will not rest until not only is that precedent dead and buried — mission accomplish­ed now on that — but until it is impossible for a woman or girl to avail herself of abortion care anywhere in the country, for any reason.

That is precisely why state officials have, for example, endeavored to prevent women from leaving states with abortion bans for others where the care is legal; it’s clearly not about state sovereignt­y but control over access wholesale.

In this case, the Alliance for Hippocrati­c Medicine — a prepostero­usly named organizati­on that in contrast to its moniker is in fact seeking to do plenty of harm — and other pseudomedi­cal organizati­ons are suing the Food and Drug Administra­tion over its 2000 approval and subsequent use authorizat­ions of mifepristo­ne.

We’ve said it before but it’s worth repeating: no one — not one peer-reviewed study, not one serious medical group, not one government assessment — has ever determined that mifepristo­ne is any more dangerous than thousands of other drugs on the market. In fact, the evidence has shown that it is safer than common medication­s like penicillin.

Nor is there any particular­ly compelling case that there was anything irregular about the FDA’s approval of the drug, which underwent the same evaluative procedures as many others.

When the plaintiffs sued, they did so on a theory of legal standing that relied entirely on hypothetic­al harms that they might suffer from patients suffering from the very rare complicati­ons the drug could produce, or the hypothetic­al liabilitie­s they might face; apparently painting a strained theoretica­l scenario is now enough to be taken seriously in federal court.

No surprise that the judge who first received the suit was ideologica­l warrior Matthew Kacsmaryk, the go-to triggerman for conservati­ve orthodoxy’s judicial drive-bys. His initial ruling was replete with language straight out of the antiaborti­on activist playbook. An appeals panel correctly shot him down, but moved to overturn the 2016 and 2021 modificati­ons that allowed mifepristo­ne to be prescribed more easily and sent over the mail.

That ruling is now stayed, and the Supreme Court should make sure it never goes into effect. Sadly, the consequenc­es of a lack of safe abortion procedures, unlike the plaintiffs’ standing, is far from hypothetic­al. If mifepristo­ne is banned, more women will suffer, and more will die.

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